Dropped Tennis Ball: Solving for Speed and Force

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The discussion focuses on calculating the speed and force exerted on a tennis ball dropped from a height of 3.9 m. The calculated speed at contact with the floor is 8.743 m/s, which is confirmed as correct. However, the user struggles with determining the force exerted by the floor due to a unit conversion error, as the compression of the ball is given in centimeters instead of meters. This miscalculation affects the application of the kinematic equation and Hooke's Law. Correcting the unit conversion from centimeters to meters is essential for accurate calculations.
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Can someone please check my equations to see if I am going about this the right way.

A 0.4 kg tennis ball is dropped from rest at a height of 3.9 m onto a hard floor.

a) What is the speed of the ball at the instant of contact with the floor? I solved to be 8.743

A flash photograph shows that the ball is compressed a maximum of 0.6 cm when it strikes the floor.

b) Assuming that the acceleration of the ball is constant during its contact with the floor, what force does the floor exert on the ball?

I used my v final from part a as my v initial for part b. So
v initial = 8.743
v final = 0
delta x = 3.9

using the formula vf2=vI2+2axdelta x
which gave me 0=(8.734)2+(2)ax(.6) = 63.7

then using F=ma+9.8m
gave f= (0.4)(63.7)+(9.8)(0.4) so F=29.4

but this is incorrect. Can anyone point out what I'm missing?
 
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Assuming you used the right numbers, it looks like number 1 is probably correct.

For part two the tennis ball is compressed, that's interesting, it's almost spring-like...
 
The only way I now how to solve force of a spring is using Hookes Law, and I can't seem to make that work either.

Is there any other advice you can give me?
Could it have something to do with my original displacement is in m and the second part is in cm?
 
anyone?
 
Hi jspek9,

jspek9 said:
The only way I now how to solve force of a spring is using Hookes Law, and I can't seem to make that work either.

Is there any other advice you can give me?
Could it have something to do with my original displacement is in m and the second part is in cm?

That's right; you have a problem with the units in your work. When you calculated this line in your original post:

jspek9 said:
using the formula vf2=vI2+2axdelta x
which gave me 0=(8.734)2+(2)ax(.6) = 63.7

the 8.734 is in m/s, and the .6 is in cm, so the 63.7 will not be in m/s^2. You probably want to convert the 0.6cm to meters.
 
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